Gwaze's dna found Bridesmaid
Dresses Australia Sale on niece's clothing and sheets Traces of
george gwaze's dna was found on the clothing and bedsheets of his 10yearold
niece charlene makaza, who he is accused of raping and murdering, a court was
told today. But a dna profile expert warned that she treated the scientific
discoveries with"Caution". The 16th day of the high court retrial in
christchurch of george gwaze, a 60yearold zimbabwean vet accused of sexually
violating and murdering his niece in christchurch in january 2007, was told dna
could be transferred during washes. The crown alleges charlene was raped and
suffocated by her uncle who she knew as"Dad". The defence claims charlene
was"Riddled"With an hiv virus she had carried since birth, and that was what
killed her. The court has been told she was diagnosed with hiv at christchurch
hospital only after she was found dying in her bed. Gwaze has denied one count
of murder and two charges of sexual violation. Ms vintiner, who tested for the
presence of seminal fluid on items taken from the gwaze household, confirmed
that dna from gwaze's sperm was found on charlene's underpants. Two other pairs
of her underpants, as well as a skirt she was wearing the night she died, also
showed traces of the murder accused's dna. But the defence witness agreed with
gwaze's lawyer jonathan eaton that in a house with a"Sexually active male"There
was a"Very real possibility"That underpants semen stains will transfer during
the http://www.fdressesaustralia.com/special-occasion-dresses/graduation-dresses.html
household's washing cycles, either by handwash or machinewash. Ms vintiner also
told the jury of seven men and five women that in dealing with cotton
underpants, 46 per cent of fdressesaustralia semen
samples would remain on the clothing after a cold wash. If washed again,
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43 per cent would remain. The witness agreed with mr eaton that the process was
destined to repeat itself"Day after day". Only several washes in"Really
hot"Water would bring the traces down to nondetectable levels. She accepted the
defence notion that her task would have taken on"Far more significance"If dna
samples from someone outside the gwaze household was found.